Colo. Gay Discrimination Alleged Over Wedding Cake

DENVER -- A gay couple is pursuing a discrimination complaint against a Colorado bakery, saying the business refused them a wedding cake to honor their Massachusetts ceremony, and alleging that the owners have a history of turning away same-sex couples.

As more states move to legalize same-sex marriage and civil unions, the case highlights a growing tension between gay rights advocates and supporters of religious freedom.

"Religious freedom is a fundamental right in America and it’s something that we champion at the ACLU. We are all entitled to our religious beliefs and we fight for that," said Mark Silverstein, the legal director of the group in Colorado, which filed the complaint on behalf of the couple. "But someone’s personal religious beliefs don’t justify breaking the law by discriminating against others in the public sphere."

The attorney for Jack Phillips, one of the owners of Masterpiece Cakeshop, said she sees it differently.

"We don’t believe that this is case about commerce. At its heart, this is a case about conscience," said Nicolle Martin. She said the matter is important because it will serve as an example for future cases across the country as more gay couples gain legal recognitions for their relationships.

"It brings it to the forefront. I just don’t think that we should heighten one person’s beliefs over and above another person’s beliefs," she said.

The Colorado Attorney General’s office filed a formal complaint last week after the ACLU initiated the process last year on behalf of David Mullins and Charlie Craig. The case is scheduled for a hearing in September before Colorado’s Civil Rights Commission.

Nationwide, 12 states now allow gay marriage, with Rhode Island, Delaware and Minnesota doing so this year. And in a year that Colorado lawmakers approved civil unions, they also elected the first gay Speaker of the House.

But Colorado’s civil union law does not provide religious protections for businesses despite the urging of Republican lawmakers. Democrats argued that such a provision would give businesses cover to discriminate.

The Colorado Attorney General’s office filed a formal complaint last week after the ACLU initiated the process last year on behalf of David Mullins and Charlie Craig

Mullins, 28, and Craig, 33, filed the discrimination complaint against Phillips after visiting his business in suburban Denver last summer. After a few minutes looking at pictures of different cakes, the couple said Phillips told them he wouldn’t make a cake for them when he found out it was to celebrate their wedding in Colorado after they got married in Massachusetts. Phillips has said making a wedding cake for gay couples would violate his Christian religious beliefs, according to the complaint.

"We were all very upset, but I was angry and I felt dehumanized and mortified," Mullins said. He said he vented his frustration on Facebook and was surprised at how "the story ended up catching fire," with responses from local media and bloggers in other countries posting about it.

"We felt that the best way to honor the support that they had given us was to follow this complaint through," he said. In the process, the ACLU said they found out about two other gay couples who had been refused a wedding cake from the same shop. Both have written affidavits in support of the discrimination claim.

Recent advances on gay rights only underscore Colorado’s difficult past on the issue. In 2006, voters banned gay married. More notably, in 1992, voters approved a ban on municipal antidiscrimination laws to protect gays, leading some to brand Colorado a "hate state." Four years later, the U.S. Supreme Court said the law, known as Amendment 2, was unconstitutional.

The complaint seeks to force Masterpiece Cakeshop to "cease and desist" the practice of refusing wedding cakes for gay couples, and to tell the public that their business is open to everyone.

If Phillips loses the case and refuses to comply with the order, he would face fines of $500 per case and up to a year in jail, his attorney said.

"It would force him to choose between his conscience and a paycheck. I just think that’s an intolerable choice," Martin said.

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Comments

Anonymous, 2013-06-06 17:38:09

But according to the defence lawyer it is ok for the shop owner to pit his beliefs above other people’s she has just made prosecuting this jack asa very simple.

Anonymous, 2013-06-06 18:16:24

Just curious -- where in the bible does it say anything about making desserts for gay people. ? Also to not be a hypocrite wouldn’t he have to refuse all customers that don’t meet alleged biblical rules ? Do customers fill out a questionnaire re: whether they are divorced or had premarital sex or eat pork or shellfish -- the list can go on and on -- Sounds to me like all the rest -- just using the religion card to be able to discriminate

Anonymous, 2013-06-06 19:29:26

Sorry folks autocomplete strikes again. Asa=ass and pit=put.

James Borrazas, 2013-06-06 21:04:30

People who engage in commerce either sell to everyone or they sell to no one. Being in business no more gives the right to inflict one’s own religious beliefs on others than to try to do so by political means. The constitution protects the buyer’s religious freedom from the seller just as much as the other way around. People who insist on adhering to their religious beliefs must also respect the right of others who may disagree with them. It’s one of the "costs of doing business" enshrined in our Constitution. Besides, commerce is not a religious activity, and therefore, before the law, religion does not enter into it. Businesspeople have no more to criticize gay people than they would have with Jews or Muslims, or even Presbyterians for that matter!

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